with David Huffman (Professor of Economics, University of Pittsburgh).
The briq Short Lecture Series comprises three lectures of 90 minutes each, held consecutively on a single day by top-level researchers in the elds of behavioral economics and the sources of inequality.

In this course I will discuss techniques of experimental economics and illustrate design and methodological issues in discussing recent topics in behavioral economics. The suggested topics are listed below and include (1) an introduction to lab experiments, potential objections against lab evidence, generalizability and experimental methods, (2) morality, (3) formation of preferences and personality, (4) measuring preferences on a global scale; cultural economics and long-term development.
Additional possible topics include psychology of incentives, reference dependent preferences and liberal paternalism. Participants are also invited to suggest topics. In addition to discussing design choices I will highlight the benefits of combining different data sets (survey and experiments), how to run experiments with children and in representative samples, and how to validate survey measures with experiments. Conditional on interest, I will comment on publication strategies and on how to respond to referee comments using examples. In terms of procedures, the course will be a mixture of presentation and discussion.

In this course I will discuss techniques of experimental economics and illustrate design and methodological issues in discussing recent topics in behavioral economics. The suggested topics are listed below and include (1) an introduction to lab experiments, potential objections against lab evidence, generalizability and experimental methods, (2) morality, (3) formation of preferences and personality, (4) measuring preferences on a global scale; cultural economics and long-term development.
Additional possible topics include psychology of incentives, reference dependent preferences and liberal paternalism. Participants are also invited to suggest topics. In addition to discussing design choices I will highlight the benefits of combining different data sets (survey and experiments), how to run experiments with children and in representative samples, and how to validate survey measures with experiments. Conditional on interest, I will comment on publication strategies and on how to respond to referee comments using examples. In terms of procedures, the course will be a mixture of presentation and discussion.

In this course I will discuss techniques of experimental economics and illustrate design and methodological issues in discussing recent topics in behavioral economics. The suggested topics are listed below and include (1) an introduction to lab experiments, potential objections against lab evidence, generalizability and experimental methods, (2) morality, (3) formation of preferences and personality, (4) measuring preferences on a global scale; cultural economics and long-term development.
Additional possible topics include psychology of incentives, reference dependent preferences and liberal paternalism. Participants are also invited to suggest topics. In addition to discussing design choices I will highlight the benefits of combining different data sets (survey and experiments), how to run experiments with children and in representative samples, and how to validate survey measures with experiments. Conditional on interest, I will comment on publication strategies and on how to respond to referee comments using examples. In terms of procedures, the course will be a mixture of presentation and discussion.

with David Huffman (Professor of Economics, University of Pittsburgh).
The briq Short Lecture Series comprises three lectures of 90 minutes each, held consecutively on a single day by top-level researchers in the elds of behavioral economics and the sources of inequality.

with Paul Heidhues (Professor of Behavioral and Competition Economics Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics).
The briq Short Lecture Series comprises three lectures of 90 minutes each, held consecutively on a single day by top-level researchers in the elds of behavioral economics and the sources of inequality.

with Paul Heidhues (Professor of Behavioral and Competition Economics Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics). The briq Short Lecture Series comprises three lectures of 90 minutes each, held consecutively on a single day by top-level researchers in the elds of behavioral economics and the sources of inequality.